Do Tapes Back Cosby Accuser's Claim?

This is a partial transcript from "On the Record," February 7, 2005, that has been edited for clarity.

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GRETA VAN SUSTEREN, HOST:Bill Cosby's (search) accuser claims she's got the tapes to back up her bombshell allegations. Joining us is reporter Nicole Egan, who wrote the story for The Philadelphia Daily News.

Nicole, what is this involving tapes?

NICOLE WEISENSEE EGAN, PHILADELPHIA DAILY NEWS: Well, what I reported was that the alleged victim in Canada recorded some conversations that occurred with Bill Cosby after she filed her report with the Canadian police in January and that Mr. Cosby initiated them and that they support her allegations that he drugged and groped her at his Cheltenham township home last January.

VAN SUSTEREN: All right, take us back. How is it, I mean, at least according to her, that she was in any sort of situation in which she claims that Bill Cosby groped her?

EGAN: Well, according to the police report she filed, they went out to dinner in Philadelphia with some friends last January and that Mr. Cosby invited her back to his Elkins Park mansion. When they got there, she said she was stressed and not feeling well and that he offered her some pills and that when she took them, she started feeling dizzy. And she basically — from what I understand, according to her attorneys — became immobilized and couldn't move, and that he, at one point, was touching her breasts and that he had her touch his groin and that when she woke up around 4 a.m., her bra was undone and her clothes were in disarray. And at that point, she got up and went home. She drove herself home.

VAN SUSTEREN: All right. And when was the first time that she told anybody about this incident that she said happened last January?

EGAN: She didn't tell anyone until she told her mother a few weeks before she went to the Canadian authorities.

VAN SUSTEREN: And in terms of these tapes — these conversations that she claims that she had with Bill Cosby — that was after she told her mother, after she told the authorities, and these were tapings that she made. What's on these tapes?

EGAN: I can't really get into that. I don't really want to go beyond what I've reported so far. But they support her allegations.

VAN SUSTEREN: And these are statements by Bill Cosby that support her allegations from last January.

EGAN: Yes, ma'am.

VAN SUSTEREN: Have you actually heard these? I won't pry any further, but have you heard these tapes?

EGAN: No, I haven't heard them.

VAN SUSTEREN: So are you taking her word that it corroborates her allegations?

EGAN: I can't get into how I know about it, or what I'm doing, but it's good information.

VAN SUSTEREN: What is going to happen? I mean, is the district attorney looking at this for a possible criminal prosecution?

EGAN: Yes, he is. And two weeks ago, he said that he would announce a decision on whether to file charges against Mr. Cosby sometime this week.

VAN SUSTEREN: Has Bill Cosby made any statement at all?

EGAN: No, he hasn't, other than statements he's made through his lawyer, Mr. Walter Phillips, Jr.

VAN SUSTEREN: All right, Nicole. Thank you very much. Appreciate you joining us.

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